S
OURCES AND
M
ETHODS
FOR THE STUDY OF POSTCONQUEST
M
ESOAMERICAN
E
THNOHISTORY,
PROVISIONAL VERSION
James Lockhart, Lisa Sousa, and Stephanie Wood, editors
CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTORY
Preliminary Remarks
James Lockhart, Lisa Sousa, and Stephanie Wood
Introduction: Background and Course of the New Philology
James Lockhart
II. BODY
1.
The Testaments of Culhuacan
Sarah Cline
2.
The Book of Tributes: The Cuernavaca-region Censuses
Sarah Cline
3.
Nahua Pictorial Genealogies
Delia Annunziata Cosentino
4.
Primordial Titles
Robert Haskett
5.
Nahuatl and Spanish Sources for Coyoacan
Rebecca Horn
6.
Legal Documents as a Source for Ethnohistory
Susan Kellogg
7.
Spanish Court Records from Late Colonial Guatemala
Catherine Komisaruk
8.
Sixteenth-Century Tlaxcalan Pictorial Documents
Travis Barton Kranz
on the Conquest of Mexico
9.
The Tlaxcala-Puebla Family of Annals
Frances Krug and Camilla Townsend
10.
Sacramental and Confraternal Records from
Annette McLeod
Tecamachalco's Parish Archive
11.
The Nahuatl Testaments of San Esteban de Nueva
Leslie S. Offutt
Tlaxcala (Saltillo)
12.
Spanish Sources for Nahua Corporate Religious
Edward W. Osowski
Practice, Post-1760s
13.
Image/Texts in Sixteenth-Century Mexican Murals
Jeanette F. Peterson
14.
Sources for Indigenous Women and Men in the
Caterina Pizzigoni
Valley of Toluca, Eighteenth Century
15.
Sources for the Ethnohistory and Afrohistory of
Matthew Restall
Postconquest Yucatan
16.
The Annals of Chimalpahin
Susan Schroeder
17.
Nahuatl Plays
Barry D. Sell
18.
Sexuality in Maya and Nahuatl Sources
Pete Sigal
19.
The Jalostotitlan Petitions, 1611–1618
John Sullivan
20.
Sources and Methods for the Study of Mixtec History
Kevin Terraciano
21.
Sources for the History of the Indigenous Peoples
Irene Vasquez
of North Mexico
22.
The Techialoyan Codices
Stephanie Wood
(This web version hosted by the
Wired Humanities Project
,
University of Oregon
, Eugene, Oregon, 2007.)